rel="nofollow" href="#litres_trial_promo">Chapter 40
Prologue
Watching Madeline Saga from outside her gallery had become an obsession. Just like Madeline also had an obsession—art.
Madeline was in her gallery all day. Then she would return at night, often wearing different clothes, more casual than her usual fare, her silky black hair pulled back loosely.
There was always a breath held for a moment, when Madeline opened the building’s door and disappeared. It only lasted for a minute. Likely Madeline was simply talking with one of the doormen, who were there twenty-four hours. Then, through the gallery’s glass walls, Madeline could be seen switching on lights and walking her gallery. She would pause to stare at the paintings and sculptures as if studying them for the first time.
She would disappear again—this time into the back room, sometimes for minutes, sometimes for hours. The torture of waiting could be exquisite. When she finally left, there was always the flattening of mood, the sadness that crept in.
But Madeline would be back. Madeline could be watched again. Soon.
1
“I need you on something, Izzy,” Mayburn said, looking serious, his brown eyebrows pushed together.
“Can’t,” I answered without asking what the assignment was. I leaned back to give the waiter room to place our plates.
Mayburn continued to talk as if he hadn’t heard me, as if the waiter wasn’t between us. “It’s a part-time gig. Just part-time.”
I waited until the waiter finished.
“That’s nice,” I said to Mayburn. “But since I have a full-time job now…” My friend Maggie Bristol, who was also my boss, was pregnant and due in nearly a month. She needed me to take more responsibility at the criminal defense firm of Bristol & Associates, so I had little or no time for a freelance private investigation gig.
“You have to do it.” Mayburn bit into a lobster roll, then looked around the restaurant on North Sheffield. “When did all these damn fish places open in Chicago?”
“You don’t like your lobster roll?” I tasted my crab cake, which was delicious.
“It’s not that I don’t like the food.” He gestured around with his sandwich. “But when did every second bar start looking like a boathouse from northern Michigan?”
I glanced around. Kayaks, rowboats and oars hung from the ceiling, accented by netting and fishing poles.
“Anyway,” Mayburn said, putting his lobster roll on his plate. “This is an assignment only you can do.”
“Put Christopher on it,” I said. My dad worked occasionally for Mayburn, as well. Somehow the part-time private detective work that I did with them had become a family affair.
“I did get Christopher on it. Sort of. Research. But I need you at the front of the house.”
“What house? Does this have to do with Lucy?”
The love of Mayburn’s life, Lucy DeSanto, was a lovely woman, someone I admired for her kindness and her devotion to her family.
“It’s not Lucy,” he said.
“Then who’s the client?”
Mayburn pushed aside a bottle of hot sauce. There were two more still on the table. He lifted one—Mojo Hojo Caliente—then another—Crazy Billy’s Brain Damage. He pushed them away.
He looked at me. “It’s the Saga.”
“Madeline Saga?” I couldn’t keep the surprise from my voice. “From what you told me about her, I guess it’s good that you’re pushing away the hot sauce. Stay away from the heat.”
“Ha. Yeah.” According to Mayburn, he and Madeline had engaged in a very sexy and tumultuous relationship. Mayburn was the first to admit that the tumult was his own. He’d always feared she didn’t love him as much as he did her, that her true love was art and her gallery.
“Does she still have her own gallery?” I asked.
He